title & logo · 2020/2/28 · title here 2 100% of families have access to child care 10%...
TRANSCRIPT
Title here
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100%of families have access
to child care
10%Maximum Family Income Spent on
Child Care
Every ChildHas a Strong
Start
$1.2 Billion ROI
Net benefits predictedfor current cohort of children
from implementing BRC recommendations
20 %Administrative
Efficiencyfrom Shared Services
It would be incorrect and short-sighted to assume the investments in “early childhood programs” benefit only the participants and not the pubic who pays
for them. “Whether one thinks it is the moral thing to do or whether it is the role of government, it makes economic sense to invest in increasing
productivity; to spend less early on to prevent much greater costs later.”
Blue Ribbon Commission on Financing High Quality Affordable Child Care, 2016Quoting James J. Heckman, The Economics of Inequality: The Value of Early
Education , 2011
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Brief Bibliography of Sources • Quantifying the Life-cycle
Benefits of an Influential Early Childhood Program
• Blue Ribbon Commission on Financing High Quality, Affordable Child Care
• Building Vermont's Future From the Child Up Think Tank Report
• Vermont's Early Care & Learning Dividend Report
• Transforming the Financing of Early Care and Education
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Outcomes & Savings 5
ROI from investments in high quality affordable child care results in:• Savings for K-12, public &
private health, criminal justice expenditures
• Set up for success in life including resilience to ACEs
• Wage growth for ECEs, wage growth for VT workers
• Overall increased economic output
• Parents – especially mothers –can stay in workforce
Early Care & Education Program Characteristics
• Regulated programs will be high-quality (QRIS rating of 4 or 5 stars)
• Educators are paid what they deserve and have career growth opportunities
• Wrap around supports for children and families
• Professional supports for early educators
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• Family contributions on a sliding scale, based on income level
• Reimbursements reflect actual cost of high quality care
• Blended and braided federal, state and private funding streams managed in dedicated ECE fund by state-level coordinator
Child Care Financial Assistance Program
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Coordinated Functions
Referrals and Interventions
Regional Planning
Professional Development and Support
Data, Monitoring
and Assessment
Shared Services
System Administration & Service Delivery • Think Tank recommended
service delivery in regions overseen by ECE hubs
• Coordinated oversight of hubs and ECE programs in AOE and AHS and/or new Dept. of ECE
• Finance oversight by statewide coordinator
BRC and Think Tank made recommendations – none are sufficient to fund the system
• Reallocate savings• Public-private partnerships• ECE license plate• Expand global commitment waiver• New revenue dedicated to ECE, e.g.
regulated cannabis sales• Income tax surcharge
Other jurisdictions have looked to bigger sources:
• Employer-paid payroll tax• Social insurance program• Property tax (not recommended if it
negatively impacts K-12 education funding)System Financing
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